"In the near future, no," said Roberts. "But I think it's good for Joc to work on his footwork, his hands. That's something he detected himself and wanted to improve his skill set and versatility. To think he's going to be in a Major League game soon? Probably not. But you never know at some point in the future. But I applaud him for the work."

Pederson, an All-Star as a rookie, has regressed in recent years and made the club this year as a fourth outfielder over Andrew Toles off the improvement he showed last postseason.

Roberts said Pederson will get his first outfield start of the season Sunday in the series finale against the Giants and right-handed starting pitcher Chris Stratton.

• Roberts said he was not overly concerned about fastball velocity drops for his two best pitchers, Clayton Kershaw and Kenley Jansen. Each allowed game-winning home runs to Joe Panik.

"With Clayton, there's a little downtick in velocity," said Roberts. "But still, the swings guys are taking on him, his command throughout the spring, the secondary pitches all have been sharp. If you're looking at strictly velocity with Clayton, I'm really not too concerned about it.

"There's obviously a little bit more with Kenley. The thing for us, if Kenley says he's healthy and the training staff and strength staff says he's healthy, he'll be fine. He misfired last night. I know he was frustrated. No one cares more than Kenley. He and I, we're synced up. He was the guy, two days after the World Series running stairs. No one cares more. There will be an uptick in velocity. With him and Clayton, we're not concerned."

Roberts' comment about Jansen caring was in response to Jansen's postgame comments about his velocity ("Who cares?"), which Jansen on Saturday said were made out of frustration from the loss.

• In a pregame ceremony Saturday night, the Dodgers received their 2017 National League championship rings.